Passer au contenu principal

Puzzle

What remains when memory is fragmented across islands, migrations, absences, and generations of women forced to rebuild from loss?
In this deeply moving portrait for Literatur.Review (S'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre), María Ignacia Schulz explores the poetry of Puerto Rican writer and journalist Ana Castillo Muñoz — a poetry shaped by grief, migration, chosen families, Afro-Caribbean identity, and the attempt to reconstruct what history, distance, and death have broken apart.
From Corona de Flores to Puntos de partida, Castillo Muñoz writes about mothers, grandmothers, barrios, oceans, and inherited wounds — but also about survival, tenderness, and collective memory. Her poems become acts of reconstruction: emotional puzzles assembled from fragments of absence.
A powerful reflection on poetry as remembrance, healing, and resistance.
(Available in Arabic, English, French, German & Spanish)
https://literatur.review/en/portrait/puzzle

What remains when memory is fragmented across islands, migrations, absences, and generations of women forced to rebuild from loss?
In this deeply moving portrait for Literatur.Review, María Ignacia Schulz explores the poetry of Puerto Rican writer and journalist Ana Castillo Muñoz — a poetry shaped by grief, migration, chosen families, Afro-Caribbean identity, and the attempt to reconstruct what history, distance, and death have broken apart.
From Corona de Flores to Puntos de partida, Castillo Muñoz writes about mothers, grandmothers, barrios, oceans, and inherited wounds — but also about survival, tenderness, and collective memory. Her poems become acts of reconstruction: emotional puzzles assembled from fragments of absence.
A powerful reflection on poetry as remembrance, healing, and resistance.
(Available in Arabic, English, French, German & Spanish)
https://literatur.review/en/portrait/puzzle (S'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)
Ana Castillo Muñoz

If you would like to support our writing, please check our subscription rates and become a member. We would be delighted!


0 commentaire

Vous voulez être le·la premier·ère à écrire un commentaire ?
Devenez membre de Literatur.Review et lancez la conversation.
Adhérer